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  • Georgian PM visits Armenia, pledges "exemplary" bilateral relations

    Global Insight
    January 18, 2013


    Georgian PM visits Armenia, pledges "exemplary" bilateral relations

    by Lilit Gevorgyan


    During his first official visit to Armenia, Georgian prime minister
    Bidzina Ivanishvili gave his personal assurance to his Armenian
    counterpart that he would revamp bilateral relations and particularly
    deal with the long-standing tensions between the central Georgian
    government and the sizeable ethnic Armenian opposition in southern
    Georgia.


    Far from "ideal" relations

    Georgia's prime minister Bidzina Ivanishvili said that the relations
    with Armenia were normal but promised to build "ideal and exemplary"
    ties, during his official visit to the Armenian capital Yerevan on 17
    January. Ivanishvili's pledge involved the three main problematic
    issues, of which the treatment of the Georgia's ethnic Armenian
    community is the prominent one.

    The two neighbouring nations have centuries of common history but
    despite this, since the collapse of the Soviet Union, relations
    between Tbilisi and Yerevan have been far from ideal, due to both
    political and economic problems that afflict Georgia's Armenians.
    According to a United Nations High Commission of Refugees (UNHCR)
    report, the ethnic Armenian community in Georgia continues to shrink
    owing to different factors. Thus in 1959 there were 442,900 Armenians
    in Georgia, constituting 11% of the total population. By 1979 this
    number had dropped to 448,000 or 9%. January 2002's national census
    revealed that the Armenian population had then reduced to only
    248,929, representing 5.7% of the total population of Georgia. The
    Armenian population of Tbilisi, according to Indiana University (US)
    research, has dropped from 74.3% nearly two centuries ago to a mere 7%
    now. Still, Armenians remain the second largest ethnic group in the
    country, with most of them centred in Tbilisi, Samtskhe-Javakheti and
    Akhalkalaki, southern Georgia.

    The latest wave of exodus came after the collapse of the Soviet Union
    and the rise of Georgian nationalism. Armenians remain poorly
    integrated into Georgian state structures, something that the EU has
    repeatedly highlighted in recent years. The European bloc has also
    raised concerns about the cultural rights of Georgia's Armenian
    community, including the right to have full-time Armenia language
    schools, while the Georgian government under President Mikhail
    Saakashvili has advocated the prominence of the Georgian language, the
    only acceptable language for landing a public job both in central and
    local authorities.

    Economic opportunities remain very limited for the southern regions,
    an issue that was further aggravated after the Georgian authorities
    shut down Russian military bases in the region between 2001 and 2007.
    The military bases were a key source of employment for local Armenians
    and since their closure, little has been done to create more economic
    opportunities. The UNHCR report also confirms that economic issues are
    increasingly the main driver behind the continued exodus, which has
    affected not only Armenian but Georgians and other ethnic groups.
    Ivanishvili, elected only a few months ago after his Georgian Dream
    coalition gained a surprise victory in October 2012's parliamentary
    race, said that the "ball is now in my court," to deliver on his
    election campaign promises and improve conditions for the sizeable
    ethnic Armenian population of Samtskhe-Javakheti and Akhalkalaki.

    Another dimension to the tensions is the continued suspicion of
    potential Armenian secessionist intentions, although officially
    Armenia has never made such claims. But the mistrust is mutual, and
    worsened in the last decade as the central Georgian government decided
    to settle Mtskheti Turks, repatriating from Central Asia, in the
    southern regions. This has led to a number of Armenian community
    organisations accuse the central government in trying to change the
    demographics of Samtskhe-Javakheti and Akhalkalaki.

    Ivanishvili is trying to solve a multi-layered problem - the issue of
    ownership of churches is also adding to ongoing Armenian-Georgian
    tensions. According to Radio Free Europe (RFE/RL), a number of worship
    sites are claimed by both the Armenian Apostolic and Georgian Orthodox
    Churches. These concern the fate of formerly Armenian churches in
    Tbilisi and abandoned medieval monasteries in Armenia's Lori province,
    bordering Georgia. Ivanishvili told RFE/RL that he also held meetings
    with the head of the Armenian Church, Catholicos Garegin II at the
    Echmiadzin headquarters of the Armenian Church. True to his innovative
    approach to thorny issues, Ivanishvili has proposed to use his
    personal capital from a special fund which will be set up to renovate
    all disputed churches, as well as sponsoring joint archaeological work
    on these sites. All initiatives have been welcomed by Armenia,
    according to Ivanishvili.

    Two different views from Georgia

    Opening a railway linking Georgia with Russia via the breakaway region
    of Abkhazia has critical operational importance for landlocked
    Armenia. The network was closed in 1992 following the outbreak of the
    war between the autonomous region and the central government.
    Armenia's desperate efforts to see the railway opened did not bring
    any results. Armenia, itself under blockade from Azerbaijan and Turkey
    over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, relies on Georgia and Iran for its
    trade. The Georgian Black Sea ports of Batumi and Poti handle most of
    the freight for Armenian businesses, but reopening the Abkhazian
    railroad would significantly reduce transportation costs for Armenian
    businesses.

    Ivanishvili made a very bold pledge to open the railway while in
    Armenia, saying that the Georgian side is ready. RFE/RL quoted
    Ivanishvili as saying, "I feel that Russia is showing understanding
    for this issue. There are positive signals from our Abkhaz brothers."
    However, almost immediately Saakashvili branded his arch-rival's plans
    as "anti-state" and damaging Georgia's national interests. The
    president, who is due to end his final term in October this year and
    is likely to be replaced by Ivanishvili, said that only after the
    "de-occupation" of Abkhazia from the Russian military the opening of
    the railway could be considered.

    Outlook and implications

    Ivanishvili's constructive dialogue with the Armenian government also
    included signing a Georgian-Armenian agreement on joint customs
    administration at the border between the two countries. The Armenian
    prime minister also proposed creating a customs bloc to facilitate
    trade between the two neighbouring states.

    Ivanishvili's visit to Armenia has to meet diplomatic and domestic
    political goals. Diplomatically, it was to counterbalance an earlier
    visit to Azerbaijan, Armenia's arch-enemy. Georgian-Azerbaijani
    relations have become particularly strong under the presidency of
    Saakashvili. The latter's quest to restore Georgia's territorial
    integrity rhymes well with that of the Azeri president Ilham Aliyev
    keen to return ethnic Armenian breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    But Ivanishvili delivered a more neutral statement in both capitals,
    saying that all disagreements must be resolved through peace talks.
    Domestically, catering to Armenian electorate is important for
    Ivanishvili's government. The recent polls showed that the ethnic
    Armenian vote mostly went to the PM's Georgian Dream coalition. Given
    the continuing frustration amongst the ethnic Armenian voters with the
    current state of affairs any promise of hope is better than none.
    Ivanishvili is unlikely to deliver on all his pledges in the short
    term. However, generous gestures such as restoring churches could
    secure support for the Georgian Dream candidate from a segment of
    Georgia's electorate in the October presidential race.

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